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Alphabetical    [«  »]
philosophic 1
philosophical 6
philosophies 3
philosophy 40
phrase 1
physical 3
physics 5
Frequency    [«  »]
42 those
41 pure
41 under
40 philosophy
40 upon
39 does
39 further
Plato
Philebus

IntraText - Concordances

philosophy
   Dialogue
1 Phileb| note of progress in the philosophy of Plato. The transcendental 2 Phileb| development of the quarrel between philosophy and poetry in Plato’s own 3 Phileb| and out of them at once. Philosophy had so deepened or intensified 4 Phileb| the supreme principle of philosophy; and the law of contradiction, 5 Phileb| the language of ancient philosophy, the relative character 6 Phileb| and belongs to a stage of philosophy which has passed away. Plato 7 Phileb| unfortunately no school of Greek philosophy known to us which combined 8 Phileb| is no side or aspect of philosophy which may not with reason 9 Phileb| the corner-stone of moral philosophy? To the higher thinker the 10 Phileb| The schools of ancient philosophy which seem so far from us— 11 Phileb| undermined in us by false philosophy or the practice of mental 12 Phileb| posteriori notions, the philosophy of experience, the philosophy 13 Phileb| philosophy of experience, the philosophy of intuition—all of them 14 Phileb| determine what history, what philosophy has contributed to them; 15 Phileb| against a system of moral philosophy so beneficent, so enlightened, 16 Phileb| that the influence of their philosophy on politicsespecially on 17 Phileb| great word in the history of philosophy would have remained unspoken. 18 Phileb| extraordinary progress, in moral philosophy we are supposed by them 19 Phileb| depreciatingly of our modern ethical philosophy. For they are the first 20 Phileb| exactness which is required in philosophy will not allow us to comprehend 21 Phileb| the other pole of moral philosophy had been excluded. All men 22 Phileb| several of the virtues. No philosophy has ever stood this criticism 23 Phileb| no longer the only moral philosophy, but one among many which 24 Phileb| because the utilitarian philosophy can no longer claim ‘the 25 Phileb| utility in a system of moral philosophy?’ is analogous to the question 26 Phileb| Scripture and in nature. No philosophy has supplied a sanction 27 Phileb| various principles of moral philosophy, we may now arrange our 28 Phileb| last development of his philosophy. The extreme and one-sided 29 Phileb| first time has a place in philosophy; the natural claim of dialectic 30 Phileb| Aristotle by Plato. Of all philosophy and of all art the true 31 Phileb| the beginnings of his own philosophy. At the time of his death 32 Phileb| abstractions of the Eleatic philosophy. The dry attempt to reduce 33 Phileb| to reduce the presocratic philosophy by his own rather arbitrary 34 Phileb| remains of other schools of philosophy as well as of the Peripatetics. 35 Phileb| of Hellas. The decline of philosophy during this period is no 36 Phileb| only from the history of philosophy in later ages. The more 37 Phileb| saying in which theology and philosophy are blended and reconciled; 38 Phileb| many questions of modern philosophy which are anticipated in 39 Phileb| to be masters in natural philosophy, who deny the very existence 40 Phileb| the inspirations of divine philosophy.~PROTARCHUS: And now, Socrates,


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